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AEROSPACE
X-59 construction reaches halfway point
by Staff Writers
Palmdale CA (SPX) Dec 18, 2020

file illustration only

NASA is on a mission to revolutionize supersonic air travel for passengers across the globe. In this image, you'll see a halfway built, single-piloted X-59 Quiet SuperSonic Technology (QueSST) aircraft, which will be used to provide rule-makers the data needed to enable a new commercial market for faster-than-sound air travel over land.

The aircraft's uniquely crafted parts help ensure it will reduce a disruptive sonic boom to a quiet sonic thump to people on the ground when flying. The X-59 team at Lockheed Martin in Palmdale, California, recently closed the structural backbone of the aircraft - the wing section - while simultaneously working on the plane's forebody and empennage.

The forebody section of the aircraft will carry the pilot and the avionics needed to fly the aircraft. The empennage supports the engine and other flight systems.

The team will soon merge all three sections together and gear up for final assembly in 2021. The X-59 will undergo numerous tests to ensure structural integrity of the aircraft and that its components work properly.

First flight of the aircraft will be in 2022, and community testing to understand the public's perception of the X-59's sound will begin in 2024.

Image Credit: Lockheed Martin Text Credit: Sasha Ellis, NASA


Related Links
Aeronautics at NASA
Aerospace News at SpaceMart.com


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AEROSPACE
DARPA Gremlins Project Completes Third Flight Test Deployment
Washington DC (SPX) Dec 11, 2020
Attempts at airborne retrieval of three unmanned air vehicles, nicknamed Gremlins, were just inches from success in DARPA's latest flight test series that started on October 28. Each X-61A Gremlins Air Vehicle (GAV) flew for more than two hours, successfully validating all autonomous formation flying positions and safety features. Nine attempts were made at mechanical engagement of the GAVs to the docking bullet extended from a C-130 aircraft, but relative movement was more dynamic than expected a ... read more

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